Thursday, 8 December 2016

Helen Roseveare (1925-2016) A Tribute

Christian Focus Publications
would like to extend its sincerest condolences to the family and friends of our
dear Helen Roseveare, who passed away this morning. She dedicated her life to
serving others even in the deep trials of life. She pioneered vital medical
work in the rainforests of what is now the Democratic Republic of Congo and was
an internationally respected speaker with WEC ministries. We are thankful at
Christian Focus for Helen’s ministry through the books we have been blessed to
publish. She spent her life in service for the Lord and today she is with Him,
worshipping Him, in heaven.

Catherine Mackenzie, Children’s Editor at Christian Focus, shares the
impact Helen Roseveare had on her life.

This morning a good friend and
encourager Helen Roseveare passed away, she had been longing to go home to be
with Christ. Now this has happened we who remain look back at her life and
rejoice in the work that the Lord gave her and in the witness she gave to his
worthiness.

It was eleven years ago that I
met Helen Roseveare for the first time. She had not long celebrated her
eightieth birthday. I’d read her books and knew her story and somehow or other
I had been invited to stay with her in Belfast. It was great to actually meet
one of my heroines. She was not only encouraging, she was challenging. It was
an environment – all be it just for a weekend – where I felt safe to be honest
with her and Pat, her friend, about the challenges and struggles of my own little
life. Even though she had been through so much herself (if you don’t know what
I mean then read her books) my problems didn’t feel too insignificant to share.
And the words she gave me before I left on the flight from Belfast to Inverness
were straight forward – just telling me to keep on going. And I’m thankful to
her and to God that I have through His strength.

After that she came over to my
congregation to do a conference. It was there that she gave, as part of her
message, four little words that I believe were the backbone to her life and
reinforced, for me, the message of her books, the message she gave me before I
left Belfast and the message her Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, gives all
believers.

“Jesus is Worth it”.

Towards the end of that conference
I had the pleasure of taking her and Pat for a tour of the Black Isle – a
Scottish peninsula near Inverness. What took place at lunch that day is one of
several distinct ‘Helen and Pat’ memories that will stay with me for the rest
of my life. If you’ve not met either of them – let me describe these two women
of God… in two words (believe me I could pick another 100 words to describe
them and I wouldn’t do them justice.)

Smart. They both graduated in
medicine at a time when to be a female graduate in any discipline like this was
rare.

Cosmopolitan. Both travelled
extensively – before the easy days of online booking and satnav.

But if you had been the couple
sitting beside us in the restaurant that day you wouldn’t have looked twice.
You would have presumed ‘they’re just two little old ladies’. But that’s one
point where the church and the world differs – God’s kingdom never puts the
word ‘just’ before any category of believer – particularly little old ladies.

Our neighbouring diners were
given a visual and audible lesson in this when, after lunch, Pat and Helen’s
conversation went as follows:

“I don’t think we’ll ever be able
to get back to Afghanistan but it is a beautiful country, and the Lord is at
work there…” – or words to that effect.

As my chin dropped I could see
the looks on the people at the table beside us as they turned and stared. Two
women they had just spent the last hour ignoring were talking about a trip they
had made to what was now one of the most notoriously violent countries in the
world.

Helen and Pat started reminiscing
about people who had lived and worked in that region and about the brief time
they had spent in a nation that was now in the thick of a conflict that threw
up words like Taliban and Terrorist.

I drove them back to my parent’s
house and before too long they were on their way back to Belfast discussing, no
doubt, their plans for the development of the girl’s clubs they were involved
in and the future fundraising for their local church.

So don’t make assumptions about
little old ladies… especially when you hear the word church and missionary in
the same sentence … they may very well have been where we will never go, have
done what we wouldn’t dream of, and have given up what we just aren’t willing
to.

Helen Roseveare was a little old
lady, during the time I knew her, but really age didn’t come into it. She was a
woman after God’s own heart and Jesus was the one that her heart longed after.
She’s with him this morning – still part of the church as she worships more
fully in heaven. We who remain, continue as she did once to long for home.

About Me

I am a Christian, saved by grace alone through faith alone. I have had the neuroimmune disorder ME, Myalgic Encephalomyelitis, since 1991. From North Somerset, now in N. Ireland. Please see my website for further information about ME.